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Transcript
1609–1610
Spaniards establish a settlement
that will become present-day
Santa Fe, New Mexico.
9000–8001 B.C.
Wheat and barley
are the first plants
grown as food
crops.
Plants
300–291 B.C.
Theophrastus,
often called the
“Father of Botany,”
describes more
than 500 plants in
his book History of
Plants.
What You’ll Learn
Chapter 21
What is a plant?
Chapter 22
The Diversity of Plants
Chapter 23
Plant Structure and Function
Chapter 24
Reproduction in Plants
Unit 7 Review
BioDigest and Standardized Test Practice
Why It’s Important
Although plants have different forms, they have common
structures and functions. Over time, adaptations of these
structures and functions resulted in the diversity of plants
found in the land and water biomes on Earth. In these
biomes, plants are an essential resource for many of the
other organisms that live there, including humans. These
organisms depend on plants for oxygen and, directly or
indirectly, for food.
Understanding the Photo
Plant heights vary from a few millimeters
to many meters. These conifer trees can
grow to be hundreds of times taller than
the ferns on the forest floor.
556
Carr Clifton/Minden Pictures
bdol.glencoe.com/webquest
1667
Seed plants are
classified as monocots or dicots
according to the
number of seed
leaves (1 or 2) in
their seeds.
1791
The Bill of Rights
is ratified.
1851
It is discovered that
alternation of generations is part of the life
cycle of plants, such as
mosses.
1930
The first packaged,
sliced bread is introduced in the U.S.
1967
Ten thousand-year-old
frozen lupine seeds are
discovered in the Yukon
Territory of Canada.
They germinate within
48 hours after they
thaw.
1986
The first field trials
of a genetically
altered plant
(tobacco) are
carried out.
557
What is a plant?
What You’ll Learn
■
■
You will identify and evaluate
the structural adaptations
of plants to their land
environments.
You will survey and identify
the major divisions of plants.
Why It’s Important
Plants were the first multicellular organisms to inhabit land
over 440 million years ago. Since
then, plants have developed
into a diverse group of organisms that help provide us with
food, oxygen, and shelter.
Understanding
the Photo
Because of plant adaptations
over time, different plant species
grow in the different biomes on
Earth. The flowering plants and
others growing in this mountain
meadow have structural and
physiological adaptations that
ensure their long-term survival in
this environment.
Visit bdol.glencoe.com to
• study the entire chapter
online
• access Web Links for more
information and activities
on plants
• review content with the
Interactive Tutor and selfcheck quizzes
558
Michelle Westmorland/Earth Scenes
21.1
Adapting to Life on Land
SECTION PREVIEW
Objectives
Compare and contrast
characteristics of algae and
plants.
Identify and evaluate
structural adaptations
of plants to their land
environments.
Describe the alternation
of generations in land
plants.
Alternation of Generations Make the following Foldable
to help you illustrate and explain how the lives of all plants
have two alternating stages.
STEP 1 Draw a mark
at the midpoint of a
vertical sheet of paper
along the side edge.
STEP 2 Fold the outside edges
in to touch at the midpoint mark.
Gametophyte
Review Vocabulary
adaptation: any structure,
behavior, or internal
process that enables an
organism to respond to
stimuli and better survive
in an environment (p. 9)
New Vocabulary
cuticle
leaf
root
stem
vascular tissue
vascular plant
nonvascular plant
seed
cuticle from the
Latin word cutis,
meaning “skin”;
The cuticle is the
outermost covering of most plants.
Sporophyte
STEP 3 Label the tabs as shown.
Illustrate and Explain As you read Section 21.1, illustrate and explain each
stage under its tab.
Origins of Plants
What is a plant? A plant is a multicellular eukaryote. Most plants can
produce their own food in the form of glucose through the process of
photosynthesis. In addition, plant cells have thick cell walls made of cellulose. The stems and leaves of most plants have a waxy waterproof
coating called a cuticle (KYEWT ih kul).
Fossils and other geological evidence suggest that a billion years ago,
plants had not yet begun to appear on land. No ferns, mosses, trees,
grasses, or wildflowers existed. The land was barren except for some algae
at the edges of inland seas and oceans. However, the shallow waters that
covered much of Earth’s surface at that time were teeming with bacteria,
algae and other protists, as well as simple animals such as corals, sponges,
jellyfish, and worms. Evidence indicates that green algae eventually
became adapted to life on land.
Scientists hypothesize that all plants probably evolved from filamentous green algae that lived in the ancient oceans. Some of the evidence
for their relationship can be found in modern members of both
groups. Green algae and plants have cell walls that contain cellulose.
Both groups have the same types of chlorophyll used in photosynthesis and store food in the form of starch. All other major groups of
organisms store food in the form of glycogen and other complex
sugars, and/or lipids.
21.1
ADAPTING TO LIFE ON LAND
559
A
B
Figure 21.1
This fossil of Cooksonia
is more than 400 million years old (A).
Cooksonia was probably one of the first vascular plants. The plant
had leafless stems (B).
The first evidence of plants in the
fossil record began to appear over
440 million years ago. These early
plants were simple in structure and
did not have leaves. They were probably instrumental in turning bare
rock into rich soil. The earliest
known plant fossils are those of psilophytes (SI luh fites), such as those
shown in Figure 21.1.
Explain how early
land plants contributed to the
movement of other plants to land.
Adaptations in Plants
Life on land has advantages as well as
challenges. All organisms need water to
survive. A filamentous green alga floating in a pond does not need to conserve
water. The alga is completely immersed
in a bath of water and dissolved nutrients, which it can absorb directly into
its cells. For most land plants, the only
available supply of water and minerals
is in the soil, and only the portion of the
plant that penetrates the soil can absorb
these nutrients.
When you studied protists, you
learned that algae reproduce by releasing unprotected unicellular gametes
560
WHAT IS A PLANT?
(t)Harlan P. Banks, (b)Matt Meadows
into the water, where fertilization and
development take place. Land plants
evolved structural and physiological
adaptations that help protect the
gametes from drying out. In some
plants, the sperm are released near the
egg so they only have to travel a short
distance. Other plants have protective
structures to ensure the survival of the
gametes. Land plants must also withstand the forces of wind and weather
and be able to grow against the force of
gravity. Over the past 443 million years
or so, plants have developed a huge
variety of adaptations that reflect both
the challenges and advantages of living
on land.
Preventing water loss
If you run your fingers over the surface of an apple, a maple leaf, or the
stem of a houseplant, you’ll probably
find that it is smooth and slightly slippery. Most fruits, leaves, and stems are
covered with a protective, waxy layer
called the cuticle. Waxes and oils are
lipids, which are biomolecules that do
not dissolve in water. The waxy cuticle
creates a barrier that helps prevent the
water in the plant’s tissues from evaporating into the atmosphere.
Figure 21.2
There is great diversity in leaf shapes and
sizes. Infer What advantage would a
broad leaf, like this cottonwood leaf,
have over a narrow leaf, like a pine
needle?
Carrying out photosynthesis
The leaf, like the one in Figure
21.2, is a plant organ that grows
from a stem and usually is where
photosynthesis occurs. Leaves differ
greatly in size and shape and they
can vary on the same plant. Each
plant division has unique leaves or
leaflike structures.
Putting down roots
Most plants depend on the soil as
their primary source for water and
other nutrients. Plants can take in
water and nutrients from the soil with
their roots. In most plants, a root is a
plant organ that absorbs water and
minerals usually from the soil. Roots
contain tissues that transport those
nutrients to the stem. Roots anchor a
plant usually in the ground. Some
roots, such as those of radishes or
sweet potatoes, accumulate starch and
function as organs of storage. Many
people use these storage roots as a
food source. Find out more about the
uses of plants on pages 1076–1079 in
the Focus On.
In the MiniLab on this page, explore
and evaluate some structural adaptations of plants that allow them to survive on land. Also, practice your lab
skills by using a dissecting microscope.
Transporting materials
Water moves from the roots of a
tree to its leaves, and the sugars produced in the leaves move to the roots
through the stem. A stem is a plant
organ that provides support for
growth, as shown in Figure 21.3. It
contains tissues for transporting food,
water, and other materials from one
part of the plant to another. Stems
also can serve as organs for food storage. In green stems, some cells contain chlorophyll and can carry out
photosynthesis.
Apply Concepts
Examining Land Plants
Liverworts are considered to be
one of the simplest of all land
plants. They show many of the
adaptations that other land plants
have evolved that enable them to
survive on a land environment.
Procedure
Marchantia
! Examine a living or preserved sample of
Marchantia. CAUTION: Wear protective
gloves when handling preserved materials.
@ Note and record the following observations. Is the plant
unicellular or multicellular? Does it have a top and bottom? How do these differ? Is it one cell in thickness or
many cells thick? Does the plant seem to grow upright like
a tree or close to the ground?
# Use a dissecting microscope to examine its top and bottom
surfaces. Are tiny holes or pores present? If you answer
“yes,” which surface has pores?
Analysis
1. Predict How might having a multicellular, thick body be
an advantage to life on land?
2. Observe Are rootlike structures present? Evaluate the significance of this adaptation to a land environment.
3. Infer What might be the role of any pores observed on
the plant? Why is the location of the pores critical to surviving on a land environment?
Figure 21.3
B
Stems can be soft and
flexible like the basil stem
shown here (A). Other plants,
such as this sugar maple tree,
have strong, thick stems that
provide support and allow
the tree to grow to
great heights (B).
A
(t)Bill Beatty/Earth Scenes, (bl)Alan & Linda Detrick/Photo Researchers, (br)Lincoln Nutting/Photo Researchers
Figure 21.4
A seed consists of an embryo,
a food supply, and a protective seed coat.
Embryo
Seed
coat
Food
supply
The stems of most plants contain
vascular tissues. Vascular tissues (VAS
kyuh lur) are made up of tubelike, elongated cells through which water, food,
and other materials are transported.
Plants that possess vascular tissues are
known as vascular plants. Most of the
plants you are familiar with, including
pine and maple trees, ferns, rhododendrons, rye grasses, English ivy, and sunflowers, are vascular plants.
Mosses and several other small, lessfamiliar plants called hornworts and
Figure 21.5
The lives of all
plants consist of
two generations.
Male
gamete (n)
Female
gamete (n)
Spores (n)
GAMETOPHYTE (n)
Meiosis
Fertilization
SPOROPHYTE (2n)
Mitosis and
cell division
562
WHAT IS A PLANT?
liverworts are usually classified as nonvascular plants. Nonvascular plants
do not have vascular tissues. The bodies of nonvascular plants are usually no
more than a few cells thick, and water
and nutrients travel from one cell to
another by the processes of osmosis
and diffusion.
The evolution of vascular tissues
was an important structural adaptation for plants that allowed them to
survive in the many habitats on land.
Vascular plants can live farther away
from water than nonvascular plants.
Also, because vascular tissues include
thickened cells called fibers that help
support growth, vascular plants can
grow much larger than nonvascular
plants.
Reproductive strategies
Adaptations in some land plants
include the evolution of seeds. A seed
is a plant organ that contains an
embryo, along with a food supply, and
is covered by a protective coat, as
shown in Figure 21.4. A seed protects the embryo from drying out and
also can aid in its dispersal. Recall that
a spore consists only of a haploid cell
with a hard, outer wall. Land plants
reproduce by either spores or seeds.
In non-seed plants, which include
mosses and ferns, the sperm require a
film of water on the gametophyte
plant to reach the egg. In seed plants,
which include all conifers and flowering plants, sperm reach the egg without using a film of water. This
difference is one reason why non-seed
plants require wetter habitats than
most seed plants.
Alternation of generations
As in algae, the lives of all plants
include two stages, or alternating generations, as shown in Figure 21.5.
The gametophyte generation of a
plant results in the development of
gametes. All cells of the gametophyte,
including the gametes, are haploid (n).
The sporophyte generation begins
with fertilization. All cells of the
sporophyte are diploid (2n) and are
produced by mitosis and cell division.
The spores are produced in the sporophyte plant body by meiosis, and are
therefore haploid (n).
In non-seed vascular plants such as
ferns, spores have hard outer coverings. Spores are released into the
environment where they can grow
into haploid gametophyte plants.
These plants produce male and female
gametes. Following fertilization, the
sporophyte plant develops and grows
from the gametophyte plant.
In seed plants, such as conifers and
flowering plants, spores develop inside
the sporophyte and become the gametophytes. The gametophytes consist of
only a few cells. Male and female
gametes are produced by these gametophytes. After fertilization, a new
sporophyte develops within a seed.
The seed eventually is released and the
new sporophyte plant grows.
Use the Problem-Solving Lab on this
page to explore further the differences between the gametophyte and
sporophyte generations of plants.
Analyze Information
How do gametophytes and sporophytes compare?
A plant has two stages in its life cycle. The stages are called
the gametophyte generation and the sporophyte generation.
Plant stage
Process
Gametophyte
n=6
Meiosis
Plant stage
Processes
Sporophyte
n = 12
Mitosis and
cell division
Female gamete
n = 12
Spores
n = 12
Solve the Problem
Diagram A shows the gametophyte generation of a plant.
This plant has a haploid chromosome number of 6. Examine
the diagram carefully and look for errors.
Diagram B shows the sporophyte generation of a plant. This
plant has a diploid chromosome number of 12. Examine the
diagram carefully and look for errors.
Thinking Critically
1. Observe Analyze diagram A, identify errors, and explain
why they are incorrect.
2. Observe Analyze diagram B, identify errors, and explain
why they are incorrect.
3. Use Models Illustrate diagrams A and B correctly so that
they connect to one another and form a complete life cycle
diagram of a plant.
Understanding Main Ideas
1. Identify three characteristics that plants share
with algae.
2. Explain how the development of the cuticle and
the vascular system influenced the evolution of
plants on land.
3. How do seeds and spores differ? What are the
benefits of producing seeds?
4. List the sequence of events involved in the alternation of generations in land plants. Do all plants
have alternation of generations?
bdol.glencoe.com/self_check_quiz
Male spore
n = 12
Thinking Critically
5. Explain why vascular plants are more likely to survive in a dry environment than nonvascular plants.
KILL REVIEW
EVIEW
SKILL
6. Make and Use Tables Make a table of the different structural adaptations plants evolved that
allow them to live on land. Include an evaluation
of how each specific adaptation helped plants survive on land. For more help, refer to Make and Use
Tables in the Skill Handbook.
21.1
ADAPTING TO LIFE ON LAND
563
21.2
SECTION PREVIEW
Objectives
Describe the phylogenic
relationships among divisions of plants.
Identify the plant kingdom divisions.
Review Vocabulary
evolution: gradual change
in an organism through
adaptations over time
(p. 10)
New Vocabulary
frond
cone
Physical
Science
Connection
Movement of
landmasses
Landmasses
continually move
over Earth’s
surface. Earth’s
outer layer is
broken into huge
sections called
plates. These
plates move slowly
over the material
underneath. Many
scientists think
that the motion of
hot material deep
within Earth
generates the
forces that cause
plates to move.
564
Survey of the Plant Kingdom
Different Plants in
Different Places
Using Prior Knowledge Members of the
plant kingdom are found worldwide.
Plants survive on the cold
tundra, in arid deserts, in
oceans, in freshwater
lakes, and in your community. If you have ever
traveled far from home,
you may have seen plants
that do not grow naturally where you live. Even
near your home you may
have noticed that some
plants grow only in sunny locations and
others thrive in shady, damp areas.
Infer What structural and physiological adaptations do plants, such as the cactus and mosses shown
here, have that would allow them to survive in
different biomes on Earth? Compare and then
evaluate the significance of these adaptations.
A Saguaro cactus (right)
and mosses (left)
Phylogeny of Plants
Many geological and climate changes have taken place since the first
plants became adapted to life on land. Landmasses have moved from
place to place over Earth’s surface, climates have changed, and bodies of
water have formed and disappeared. Hundreds of thousands of plant
species evolved, and countless numbers of these became extinct as conditions continually changed. These processes of evolution and extinction
continue to be affected by local and global changes. As plant species
evolved in this changing landscape, they retained many of their old characteristics and also developed new ones. These processes of evolution and
extinction continue today.
Some botanists use plant characteristics to classify plants into divisions. Recall that a plant division is similar to a phylum in other kingdoms. The highlights of plant evolution include origins of plants from
green algae, the production of a waxy cuticle, the development of vascular tissue and roots, and the production of seeds. The production of
seeds can be used as a basis to separate the divisions into two groups—
non-seed plants and seed plants.
WHAT IS A PLANT?
(l)Paul Wakefield/Tony Stone Images, (r)David Wrobel/Visuals Unlimited
Figure 21.6
The plant kingdom includes several
divisions of non-seed plants.
B All ferns are pterophytes.
The cinnamon fern,
Osmunda cinnamomea,
grows in swampy habitats
throughout the United
States.
C Equisetum is an arthrophyte.
It has roots, stems, and
leaves, but the stems are
hollow and appear jointed.
A Selaginella, a spike moss,
is a lycophyte. Lycophytes
are vascular plants adapted
to moist environments.
D Sphagnum is a bryophyte.
It grows in peat bogs.
E Marchantia is a
hepaticophyte. It is
found on damp rocks.
Non-seed Plants
The divisions of non-seed plants are
shown in Figure 21.6. These plants
produce hard-walled reproductive cells
called spores. Non-seed plants include
vascular and nonvascular organisms.
Hepaticophyta
Hepaticophytes (heh PAH tih koh
fites) include small plants commonly
called liverworts. Their flattened
bodies resemble the lobes of an animal’s liver. Liverworts are nonvascular plants that grow only in moist
environments. Water and nutrients
F Anthoceros, a
hornwort, is an
anthocerophyte.
It is found in
moist, shady
habitats.
move throughout a liverwort by
osmosis and diffusion. Studies comparing the biochemistry of different
plant divisions suggest that liverworts
may be the ancestors of all plants.
There are two kinds of liverworts:
thallose liverworts and leafy liverworts. Thallose liverworts have a
broad body that looks like a lobed
leaf. Leafy liverworts are creeping
plants with three rows of thin leaves
attached to a stem.
G Psilotum sporophytes
have simple stems
but no leaves or roots.
Anthocerophyta
Anthocerophytes (an THOH ser
oh fites) are also small thallose plants.
21.2
hepato- from the
Greek word hepar,
meaning “liver”;
Hepaticophytes
have liver-shaped
gametophytes.
SURVEY OF THE PLANT KINGDOM
(tl)David T. Roberts/Nature’s Images/Photo Researchers, (tc)Jim Strawser/Grant Heilman, Inc., (tr)James H. Robinson/Earth Scenes, (bl)Patti Murray/Earth Scenes,
(bcl)Gregory K. Scott/Photo Researchers, (bcr)Runk-Schoenberger/Grant Heilman, Inc., (br)Doug Wechsler/Earth Scenes
565
Compare and Contrast
Looking at Modern and Fossil Plants Many modern plants
have relatives that are known only from the fossil record. Are
modern plants similar to their fossil relatives? Are there any
differences?
Bryophyta
Bryophytes (BRI uh fites), the
mosses, are nonvascular plants that
rely on osmosis and diffusion to
transport materials. However, some
mosses have elongated cells that conduct water and sugars. Moss plants
are usually less than 5 cm tall and
have leaflike structures that are usually only one to two cells thick. Their
spores are formed in capsules.
A
B
30 meters
20 meters
2 meters
1 meter
Representation of
Lepidodendron
Representation
of Calamites
Procedure
! Examine a preserved or living sample of Lycopodium, a
club moss. CAUTION: Wear protective gloves when handling preserved material.
@ Note and record the following observations:
a. Does the plant grow flat or upright like a tree?
b. Describe the appearance of its leaves and its stem.
c. Measure the plant’s height and diameter in centimeters.
# Repeat step 2 for diagram A, a fossil relative.
$ Repeat steps 1–3 using a preserved or living sample of
Equisetum, a horsetail and diagram B, a fossil relative.
Analysis
1. Compare and Contrast Describe the similarities and differences between Lycopodium and Lepidodendron. Do your
observations justify their closeness as relatives? Explain.
2. Compare and Contrast Describe the similarities and differences between Equisetum and Calamites. Do your
observations justify their closeness as relatives? Explain.
566
WHAT IS A PLANT?
The sporophytes of these plants,
which resemble the horns of an animal, give the plants their common
name—hornworts. These nonvascular plants grow in damp, shady habitats and rely on osmosis and diffusion
to transport nutrients.
Psilophyta
Psilophytes, known as whisk ferns,
consist of thin, green stems. The
psilophytes are unique vascular plants
because they have neither roots nor
leaves. Small scales that are flat, rigid,
overlapping structures cover each
stem. The two known genera of
psilophytes are tropical or subtropical. Only one genus is found in the
southern United States.
Describe the main
difference between bryophytes and
psilophytes.
Lycophyta
Lycophytes (LI koh fites), the club
mosses, are vascular plants adapted
primarily to moist environments.
Lycophytes have stems, roots, and
leaves. Their leaves, although very
small, contain vascular tissue. Species
existing today are usually less than
25 cm high, but their ancestors grew
as tall as 30 m and formed a large part
of the vegetation of Paleozoic forests.
The plants of these ancient forests
have become part of the coal that
is now used by people for fuel.
Try MiniLab 21.2 to explore the similarities and differences between modern and fossil lycophytes.
Seed Plants
Seed plants produce seeds, which
in a dry environment are a more
effective means of reproduction than
spores. A seed consists of an embryonic plant and a food supply covered
by a hard protective seed coat. All
seed plants have vascular tissues. In
Problem-Solving Lab 21.2, you can
compare a characteristic common to
seed plants and non-seed plants.
Cycadophyta
Cycads (SI kuds) were abundant
during the Mesozoic Era. Today,
there are about 100 species of cycads.
They are palmlike trees with scaly
What trend in size is seen with gametophyte and sporophyte generations? All plants undergo alternation of generations. There is a specific trend, however, that occurs in size as
one goes from one plant division to the next.
Solve the Problem
The following graph shows the trend that occurs within the
plant kingdom as one compares the size of sporophyte and
gametophyte generations in three major divisions.
Sporophyte generation
ANTHOPHYTA
PTEROPHYTA
Increasing sporophyte size
BRYOPHYTA
Pterophyta
Pterophytes (TER oh fites), ferns, are
the most well-known and diverse
group of non-seed vascular plants.
Ferns were abundant in Paleozoic and
Mesozoic forests. They have leaves
called fronds that vary in length from
1 cm to 500 cm. The large size and
complexity of fronds is one difference
between pterophytes and other groups
of seedless vascular plants. Although
ferns are found nearly everywhere,
most grow in the tropics.
Apply Concepts
Gametophyte generation
Arthrophyta
Arthrophytes (AR throh fites), the
horsetails, are vascular plants. They
have hollow, jointed stems surrounded by whorls of scalelike leaves.
The cells covering the stems of some
arthrophytes contain large deposits of
silica. Although primarily a fossil
group, about 15 species of arthrophytes exist today. All modern horsetails are small, but their fossil relatives
were the size of trees.
Decreasing gametophyte size
Thinking Critically
1. Analyze Describe the trend that occurs to the size of the
gametophyte generation as one moves from bryophytes to
anthophytes.
2. Analyze Describe the trend that occurs to the size of the
sporophyte generation as one moves from bryophytes to
anthophytes.
3. Predict Estimate the size of the gametophyte generation
compared with the sporophyte generation in:
a. Coniferophyta. Explain.
b. Lycophyta. Explain.
4. Infer You are looking at a giant redwood tree. Which
generation is it and how do you know?
trunks and can be short or more than
20 m in height. Cycads produce male
and female cones on separate trees.
Cones are scaly structures that support male or female reproductive
structures. Cycad cones can be as
long as 1 m. Seeds are produced in
female cones. Male cones produce
clouds of pollen.
21.2
SURVEY OF THE PLANT KINGDOM
567
Table 21.1 Seed Plant Divisions
Division
Example
Common Names
Characteristics
Cycadophyta
Sago palm, cycad,
zamia, dioon
Cycads grow in tropical or subtropical
environments. These plants are slow-growing
trees with unbranched trunks. Their leaves are
palmlike. Seeds are produced in cones on
female plants.
Gnetophyta
Joint fir, Gnetum,
Welwitschia
Gnetophytes are usually found in desert or
arid environments, but some are tropical.
They exhibit diverse growth habits from vines
to low-growing forms. These plants produce
seeds in conelike structures.
Ginkgophyta
Ginkgo, maidenhair tree
Ginkgoes are tolerant of a wide range of
habitats from urban to open environments.
These trees drop their leaves in the fall. Their
seeds are surrounded by soft, fruitlike
structures.
Coniferophyta
Pine, spruce,
juniper, redwood,
fir, yew, hemlock,
arborvitae, cedar
Conifers grow in a wide range of habitats.
Depending on the species, conifers can be tall
trees or ground-covering shrubs. The leaves
of conifers are needlelike or scalelike. Seeds
develop in cones or berrylike structures.
Anthophyta
Rice, tomato, rose,
corn, basil, apple,
oak, grass, cattail,
grape, bluebell
Anthophytes are found worldwide. The division
includes a great diversity of growth habits,
forms, and sizes. All anthophytes produce
flowers from which dry or fleshy fruits with
one or more seeds develop.
Gnetophyta
There are three genera of gnetophytes (NEE toh fites) and each has distinct characteristics. Gnetum (NEE tum)
includes about 30 species of tropical
trees and climbing vines. There are
about 35 Ephedra (eh FEH dra) species
568
that grow as shrubby plants in desert
and arid regions. Welwitschia (wel
WITCH ee uh) has only one species,
which is found in the deserts of southwest Africa. Its leaves grow from the
base of a short stem that resembles a
large, shallow cap.
WHAT IS A PLANT?
(1)W.H. Hodge/Peter Arnold, Inc., (2)Gunter Ziesler/Peter Arnold, Inc., (3)Jim Strawser/Grant Heilman, Inc., (4)Runk-Schoenberger/Grant Heilman, Inc., (5)Jeff Lepore/Photo Researchers
Ginkgophyta
This division has only one living
species, Ginkgo biloba, a distinctive
tree with small, fan-shaped leaves.
Like cycads, ginkgoes (GING kohs)
have male and female reproductive
structures on separate trees. The
seeds produced on female trees have
an unpleasant smell, so ginkgoes
planted in city parks are usually male
trees. Ginkgoes are hardy and resistant to insects and to air pollution.
Coniferophyta
These are the conifers (KAH nuh
furz), cone-bearing trees such as pine,
fir, cypress, and redwood. Conifers
are vascular seed plants that produce
seeds in cones. Species of conifers can
be identified by the characteristics of
their cones or leaves that are needlelike or scaly. You can learn more
about how to identify conifers in the
BioLab at the end of the chapter.
Bristlecone pines, the oldest
known living trees in the world, are
members of this plant division.
Another type of conifer, the Pacific
yew, is a source of cancer-fighting
drugs. Read more about medicinal
plants in the Connection to Health at
the end of this chapter.
Anthophyta
Anthophytes (AN thoh fites), commonly called the flowering plants,
Figure 21.7
are the largest, most diverse group
of seed plants living on Earth. There
are approximately 250 000 species
of anthophytes. Fossils of the
Anthophyta date to early in the
Cretaceous Period. Unlike conifers,
anthophytes produce flowers from
which fruits develop, like those in
Figure 21.7. A fruit usually contains
one or more seeds. This division has
two classes: the monocotyledons (mah
nuh kah tul EE dunz) and dicotyledons
(di kah tul EE dunz). You will learn
more about the distinctions between
monocots and dicots when you read
about anthophyte tissues in Chapter 23.
Table 21.1 lists some information
about the divisions of seed plants. Do
you recognize any of the common
names of the plants? Can you add to
the list of common names?
Understanding Main Ideas
1. What is the primary difference between the seeds
of conifers and anthophytes?
2. Why are seeds an important structural adaptation? What plant divisions produce seeds? Which
plant divisions do not produce seeds?
3. What structural adaptation allows pterophytes to
grow larger than bryophytes?
4. Compare and contrast anthophytes and
anthocerophytes.
bdol.glencoe.com/self_check_quiz
These fruits and seeds
developed from flowers.
List Can you name
three vegetables that
are really fruits?
conifero- from the
Latin word conifer,
meaning “cone
bearing”; Many
plants in the division Coniferophyta
produce their
seeds on cones.
Thinking Critically
5. In which division would you expect to find apple
trees? Why?
KILL REVIEW
EVIEW
SKILL
6. Get the Big Picture Make a table of the plant
divisions. Label columns: Division, Seed Plants,
Non-seed Plants, Vascular Plants, Nonvascular
Plants, and Seeds in Fruits. For more help, refer to
Get the Big Picture in the Skill Handbook.
21.2
SURVEY OF THE PLANT KINGDOM
569
Matt Meadows
How can you make a key
for identifying conifers?
REPARATION
PREPARATION
Before You
Begin
Each conifer species has a
unique cone. The leaves of
conifer species also have
different characteristics.
How would you identify a
conifer? You would probably use a dichotomous key.
Dichotomous keys list features of related organisms
in a way that allows you
to determine each organism’s scientific name.
Below is an example from
a dichotomous key that
might be used to identify
trees.
Needles grouped in bundles
Needles not grouped in
bundles
Needlelike leaves
Flat, thin leaves
Leaves composed of three
or more leaflets
Leaves not made up of
leaflets
Problem
What characteristics can be used to create
a dichotomous key for identifying different
kinds of conifers?
Hypotheses
State your hypothesis according to the
kinds of characteristics you predict will
best serve to distinguish among several
conifer groups. Explain your reasoning.
Objectives
In this BioLab, you will:
■ Compare structures of several different
Pine needles
conifer specimens.
■ Identify which characteristics can be used
to distinguish one conifer from another.
■ Develop a model of a hierarchical classification system
(division, genus, species) based on similarities and differences using taxonomic nomenclature.
Possible Materials
twigs, branches, and cones from several different conifers
that have been identified for you
Safety Precautions
CAUTION: Always wash your hands after handling biological
materials. Always wear goggles in the lab.
Skill Handbook
If you need help with
this lab, refer to the
Skill Handbook.
Arborvitae
Hemlock
570
WHAT IS A PLANT?
Matt Meadows
LAN THE
THE EXPERIMENT
XPERIMENT
PLAN
1. Make a list of characteristics that could be included in
your key. You might consider using shape, color, size,
habitat, or other factors.
2. Determine which of those characteristics would be most
helpful in classifying your conifers.
3. Determine in what order the characteristics
should appear in your key.
4. Decide how to describe each characteristic.
Check the Plan
1. The traits described at each step in a key
are often pairs of contrasting characteristics. For example, the first step in a key
to conifers might compare “needles
grouped in bundles” with “needles
attached singly.”
2. Someone who is not familiar with conifer
identification should be able to use your key
to correctly identify any conifer it includes.
3. Make sure your teacher has approved your
experimental plan before you proceed further.
4. Carry out your plan by creating your key.
5. CLEANUP AND DISPOSAL Return all conifer specimens to
the location specified by your teacher for reuse by other
students. Wash your hands thoroughly.
Spruce
NALYZE AND
AND CONCLUDE
ONCLUDE
ANALYZE
1. Check Your Hypothesis Have someone
outside your lab group use your key to identify a conifer specimen. If he or she cannot
identify it, try to determine what the problem is and make improvements to your key.
2. Relate Concepts Give one or more examples of situations in which a dichotomous
key would be a useful tool.
3. ERROR ANALYSIS Is there only one correct
way to design a dichotomous key for your
specimens? Explain why or why not.
Project Design a different dichotomous key
that would also work to identify your specimens. You may expand your key to include
additional conifers.
Web Links To find out
more about conifers, visit
bdol.glencoe.com/conifers
21.2
SURVEY OF THE PLANT KINGDOM
571
(l)Scott Nielsen/DRK Photo, (r)Michel Viard/Peter Arnold, Inc.
Medicines from
Plants
W
hat comes to mind when you hear the
word plant? A vase full of flowers? A fruit
and vegetable garden? An evergreen forest?
Although these examples are what most people
think of when they hear the word plant, plants
provide us with much more than bouquets, food,
and lumber. Nearly 80 percent of the world’s
population relies on medications derived from
plants. In fact, just fewer than 100 plants provide
the active ingredients used in the ten dozen or so
plant-derived medicines currently on the market.
For thousands of years, the words plants and
medicines were used synonymously. In the fifth
century A.D., doctors of the Byzantine Empire
used the autumn crocus to effectively treat
rheumatism and arthritis. Hundreds of years
ago, certain groups of Native North Americans
used the rhizomes of the mayapple as a laxative,
a remedy for intestinal worms, and as a topical
treatment for warts and other skin growths. The
oils from peppermint leaves have long been used
to settle an upset stomach. Lotions containing
the liquid from the plant Aloe vera are often used
to relieve the pain associated with minor burns,
including sunburn. “Herbal” medicines have
again begun to play an important role in socalled modern medicine.
Aspirin—The wonder drug Evidence suggests that almost 2500 years ago, a Greek physician named Hippocrates used a substance from
the bark of a white willow tree to treat minor
pains and fever. The substance, which is called
salicin, unfortunately upset the stomach. Research
in the late 1800s led to the discovery of acetylsalicylic acid (ah SEE till sa lih SIH lick • A sid), or
aspirin. Aspirin originally was developed by
chemist Felix Hoffmann to relieve the joint
discomfort associated with rheumatism. Salicylic
572
WHAT IS A PLANT?
Richard Shiell/Earth Scenes
Madagascar rosy periwinkle
acid—a major component of aspirin—was finally
synthesized in the laboratory in the early 1900s.
Since then, aspirin’s use has become widespread.
New drugs for cancer Drugs that fight
two types of cancer—Hodgkin’s disease
and leukemia—have been derived from the
Madagascar rosy periwinkle. Drugs produced
from the needles and bark of the Pacific yew
have been used to treat breast, ovarian, lung, and
other cancers. Although the interest in medicinal
plants by consumers, medical experts, and pharmaceutical companies is growing, it is estimated
that less than five percent of the 250 000 different flowering plant species have been studied for
their potential use in the field of medicine.
Project Identify a plant not mentioned in this
feature that is known to have medicinal properties. Research the plant’s geographic distribution
on Earth, its use(s), the active ingredient derived
from the plant, and whether or not a synthetic
form of the active ingredient is available for use.
As a class, compile all findings and create a classroom display.
To find out more about medicines derived
from plants, visit bdol.glencoe.com/health
Section 21.1
Adapting to
Life on Land
Section 21.2
Survey of the
Plant Kingdom
STUDY GUIDE
Key Concepts
■ Plants are multicellular eukaryotes with
cells that have cell walls containing cellulose. A waterproof cuticle covers the
outer surface of most plants. Most plants
undergo photosynthesis, which produces
glucose, a form of food.
■ All plants on Earth probably evolved
from filamentous green algae that lived in
ancient oceans. The first plants to eventually move from water to land probably
were leafless forms.
■ Adaptations for life on land include a
cuticle; the development of leaves, roots,
stems, and vascular tissues; alternation of
generations; and the evolution of the seed.
Vocabulary
Key Concepts
■ The plant kingdom is grouped into major
categories called divisions.
■ Nonvascular plants are in the divisions
Anthocerophyta, Hepaticophyta, and
Bryophyta. They reproduce mainly by
using spores. Nonvascular plants do not
produce seeds.
■ Non-seed vascular plants are in the divisions Psilophyta, Lycophyta, Arthrophyta,
and Pterophyta. These plants have tissues
that conduct water and other materials
and reproduce mainly by spores.
■ Vascular seed plants in the divisions
Cycadophyta, Gnetophyta, Ginkgophyta,
and Coniferophyta produce seeds on cones.
Male cones and female cones can be on
separate plants or the same plant.
■ The division Anthophyta includes vascular,
seed-producing plants that flower. Fruits
with seeds develop from flowers. Anthophytes are divided into two groups—
monocotyledons and dicotyledons.
Vocabulary
cuticle (p. 559)
leaf (p. 561)
nonvascular plant
(p. 562)
root (p. 561)
seed (p. 562)
stem (p. 561)
vascular plant (p. 562)
vascular tissue (p. 562)
cone (p. 567)
frond (p. 567)
To help you review
plant adaptations to land, use the
Organizational Study Fold on page 559.
bdol.glencoe.com/vocabulary_puzzlemaker
CHAPTER 21 ASSESSMENT
573
(tl)Matt Meadows, (bl)David Wrobel/Visuals Unlimited, (br)James H. Robinson/Earth Scenes
11. Seeds enclosed in a fruit is a structural adapReview the Chapter 21 vocabulary words listed in
the Study Guide on page 573. Match the words
with the definitions below.
1. plants in which the transport of water and
2.
3.
4.
5.
other substances is mainly by osmosis and
diffusion from cell to cell
the organ that anchors a plant and absorbs
most of the water and minerals used by a
plant
for plants such as pines and spruces, it is the
organ that contains reproductive structures
the plant organ that is usually the site of
photosynthesis
a group of tubelike, elongated cells through
which water and other materials are transported throughout a plant
6. Which of these traits is NOT common to
7.
8.
9.
10.
574
plants and green algae?
A. reproduce by fission
B. contain cellulose in cell walls
C. store food as starch
D. contain the same kind of chlorophyll
Vascular tissues are found in ________.
A. bacteria
C. ferns
B. algae
D. hornworts
Which of the following characteristics is
NOT found in plants?
A. eukaryotic cells C. prokaryotic cells
B. cellulose cell walls D. waxy cuticle
The plant organ in the photo
to the right is from a plant in
division ________.
A. Anthocerophyta
B. Coniferophyta
C. Lycophyta
D. Anthophyta
Which group of organisms is probably the
ancestor of land plants?
A. cyanobacteria
C. bryophytes
B. archaebacteria
D. green algae
CHAPTER 21 ASSESSMENT
(tr)Matt Meadows, (bl)Ed Reschke/Peter Arnold, Inc.
tation of ________.
A. Anthophytes
C. Coniferophytes
B. Bryophytes
D. Pterophytes
12. The fern structure to the right is called a
________.
A. rhizome
B. root
C. gametophyte
D. frond
13. Open Ended Explain why biologists
hypothesize that the first plants to adapt
to life on land may have been similar to
liverworts.
14. Open Ended Anthophytes are found worldwide and include the greatest number of
known plant species. Identify, describe, and
evaluate characteristics of this division that
were important to its success. Explain your
choices.
15. Open Ended Observe the plants in
Figure 21.6 D and E. Describe the structural adaptations that contribute to their
long-term survival in moist environments.
16. Concept Map Copy the concept map below
then complete it the using the following
terms: leaves, roots, stems, vascular tissue,
vascular plant.
1.
contains
2.
which is found in
3.
5.
4.
bdol.glencoe.com/chapter_test
17.
REAL WORLD BIOCHALLENGE You are
appointed to a committee at school that is to
plan and plant a flower garden. What factors
must be considered when selecting plants for
this garden? Visit bdol.glencoe.com to
research plants and plan the garden. Sketch
a plan and list your plant selections. Explain
why each plant was chosen.
Multiple Choice
Study the cladogram below and answer questions
18–20.
Use the diagram below to answer questions 21
and 22.
Water lilies
Magnolias
Amborella
Gnetophytes
Conifers
Modern
monocots
Modern
dicots
Female
gamete (n)
Spores (n)
Flowering
Seed plants
Male
gamete (n)
GAMETOPHYTE (n)
plants
Fertilization
Meiosis
18. The cladogram shows the evolution of some
SPOROPHYTE (2n)
flowering plants. According to the cladogram, modern monocots developed
________ Amborella.
A. at the same time as C. after
B. before
D. none of these
19. Amborella is most closely related to
________.
A. modern monocots
B. modern dicots
before Amborella?
A. gnetophytes
B. modern dicots
21. The sporophyte produces spores by the
process of ________.
A. mitosis
C. fission
B. meiosis
D. fertilization
C. water lilies
D. magnolias
20. Which of the following plant types evolved
Mitosis and
cell division
22. Which of the following would NOT have a
C. magnolias
D. water lilies
haploid or n number of chromosomes?
A. gametophyte
C. sporophyte
B. spore
D. gamete
Constructed Response/Grid In
Record your answers or fill in the bubbles on your answer document using the correct place value.
23. Grid In The sporophyte of corn has 20 chromosomes. How many chromosomes would you
expect to find in corn gametes?
24. Open Ended Describe the differences between seed and non-seed plants. Considering structural
and physiological adaptations of these two plant types, infer why seed plants are found in more
diverse environments than non-seed plants.
bdol.glencoe.com/standardized_test
CHAPTER 21 ASSESSMENT
575